Reading Religious Conversion

  • 0.0
12 Weeks
$ 49

Brief Introduction

The course "Reading Religious Conversion" exposes you to a wealth of conversion stories from across the globe and throughout history. The texts explore the complex aspects of religious identities and the varied expressions of community belonging and social borders.

Description

Conversion is a multidimensional phenomenon with religious, social, political and legal implications. By examining these implications, one can learn how religious communities function, how they deal with identity issues, and how and
why they demarcate their boundaries.
Conversion canalso illustrate the policies and internal structures of such communities, interactions with those deemed as "Others", and the dynamics of minority-majority cultural groups living alongside one another.
The courseprovidesan analytic structure for understanding political, social, religious and legal issues, communal and religious limits, and the exchange of knowledge.

In this course you will find:
Variety
We tackle the diverse expressions of the phenomenon, utilizing research tools from a wide spectrum of disciplines and integrating such study into the academic world as a distinct interdisciplinary area of inquiry.

Accessibility

The digital format enables intimate and immediate meetings with ancient texts to which most of you do not have access (they will appear in the course in their original language as well as translated into English), along with exposure to works of art from the same period and the valuable information thatcan be distilled from them.

Instructors

Twenty-six world-renowned specialists guide you through the learning process, providing a broad historical, cultural and religious background for the texts. The experts help you to gain an understanding of the period in which the texts were written, and the events and ideas that the texts influenced.

Identity

The texts yield multiple notions on the forms that conversion has taken and on the forcesthat drive such a decision. These ideas broaden and enrich your grasp of the different ways people, throughout history and across the globe, have self-identified upon a continuum of identities. These include their natal religion, their chosen faith, their motivations for conversion and social, economic, legal, personal and other factors that may have contributed to the choice to convert.
Hence, past and present are in constant dialogue in this course, as are the geographical spaces in which the events occurred.

Knowledge

  • ● To understand conversion as a worldwide human phenomenon
  • ● To study world history through the prism of religious conversion
  • ● To encounter textual sources in their original language and in English translation
  • ● To discover the social and historical background of the texts
  • ● To analyze different genres of historical and mythical writing
  • ● To investigate how the visual arts interpret historical and mythical events, while learning the methodology of comparative studies
  • ● To develop independent research methods in the humanities
  • ● To explore the complex aspects of religious identities and the appearance of community belonging on the one hand, and social borders on the other

Keywords

$ 49
English
Available now
12 Weeks
Ora Limor, Haim Hames, Sarina Chen
IsraelX
edX

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